DNA and Distrust

IF 1 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW Notre Dame Law Review Pub Date : 2016-01-20 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2473728
Kerry Abrams, Brandon L. Garrett
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

Over the past three decades, government regulation and funding of DNA testing has reshaped the use of genetic evidence across various fields, including criminal law, family law, and employment law. Courts have struggled with questions of when and whether to treat genetic evidence as implicating individual rights, policy trade-offs, or federalism problems. We identify two modes of genetic testing: identification testing, used to establish a person’s identity, and predictive testing, which seeks to predict outcomes for a person. Judges and lawmakers have often drawn a bright line at predictive testing, while allowing uninhibited identity testing. The U.S. Supreme Court in Maryland v. King, for example, held that entering arrestee DNA in databanks does not implicate substantial Fourth Amendment concerns, since police do not test for genetic predispositions “not relevant to identity.” We argue that policy implications of genetic testing laws cannot be so neatly demarked. For example, federal welfare laws require states to use DNA to establish paternity to collect child support from “deadbeat dads,” which may be relevant to identity, but also creates potentially destabilizing effects on families. We explore how genetic testing has been legally regulated across a variety of fields. We identify two dominant modes of regulatory action dealing with genetics: data-driven and ethics-based. Data-driven legislation is ostensibly focused on short-term benefits of gathering a population’s genetic information. Ethics-based legislation, in contrast, is concerned with long-term consequences, such as effects on privacy. We particularly critique data-driven legislation, and we argue that judges, legislators and scholars should focus squarely on the individual and government interests at stake. We set out a list of five factors that legal actors should consider when considering genetics regulation: (1) equality, (2) accuracy, (3) privacy, (4) finality, and (5) federalism. In particular, equality concerns permeate the short history of DNA regulation. In each of the areas explored, comparatively disadvantaged groups such as arrestees, convicts, juveniles, noncitizens, and welfare recipients, have received the most intrusive regulation and collection of their genetic evidence, while comparatively privileged persons benefit from enhanced genetic privacy. We conclude that the regulation of genetic evidence deserves far more careful legal scrutiny, since the ways that genetic evidence is deployed can profoundly affect constitutional rights and the structure of legal and social institutions.
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DNA和不信任
在过去的三十年里,政府对DNA测试的监管和资助重塑了基因证据在各个领域的使用,包括刑法、家庭法和就业法。法院一直在努力解决何时以及是否将基因证据视为涉及个人权利、政策权衡或联邦制问题的问题。我们确定了两种模式的基因测试:识别测试,用于建立一个人的身份,和预测测试,旨在预测一个人的结果。法官和立法者经常对预测性测试划清界限,同时允许不受限制的身份测试。例如,美国最高法院在马里兰州诉金案中认为,将被捕者的DNA输入数据库并不涉及第四修正案的实质性问题,因为警方不会检测“与身份无关”的遗传倾向。我们认为,基因检测法律的政策含义不能如此清晰地界定。例如,联邦福利法要求各州使用DNA来确定父子关系,从“赖账爸爸”那里收取子女抚养费,这可能与身份有关,但也会对家庭造成潜在的不稳定影响。我们将探讨基因检测是如何在各个领域受到法律监管的。我们确定了两种主要的遗传学监管行动模式:数据驱动和基于伦理的。数据驱动的立法表面上关注的是收集人口遗传信息的短期利益。相反,以道德为基础的立法关注的是长期后果,比如对隐私的影响。我们特别批评数据驱动的立法,我们认为法官、立法者和学者应该直接关注利害攸关的个人和政府利益。我们列出了法律行为者在考虑基因监管时应该考虑的五个因素:(1)平等,(2)准确性,(3)隐私,(4)最终性,(5)联邦制。特别是,平等问题贯穿了DNA调控的短暂历史。在研究的每一个领域中,相对弱势的群体,如被捕者、罪犯、青少年、非公民和福利接受者,都受到了最具侵入性的监管和基因证据收集,而相对特权的人则受益于加强的基因隐私。我们的结论是,基因证据的监管应该得到更仔细的法律审查,因为基因证据的使用方式会深刻地影响宪法权利以及法律和社会机构的结构。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
11.10%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: In 1925, a group of eager and idealistic students founded the Notre Dame Lawyer. Its name was changed in 1982 to the Notre Dame Law Review, but all generations have remained committed to the original founders’ vision of a law review “synonymous with respect for law, and jealous of any unjust attacks upon it.” Today, the Law Review maintains its tradition of excellence, and its membership includes some of the most able and distinguished judges, professors, and practitioners in the country. Entirely student edited, the Law Review offers its members an invaluable occasion for training in precise analysis of legal problems and in clear and cogent presentation of legal issues.
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